Audio By Carbonatix
Economist and Chairman of the National Development Planning Commission, Professor Stephen Adei has called for a review of the government’s flagship Free Senior High School policy.
Speaking in an interview on JoyNews' Upfront with Raymond Acquah, Wednesday, Prof. Adei explained that despite the numerous advantages of the Senior High School policy, the already worsened economy is being stretched by the policy because government has to allocate about GH₵7.5billion every year to the policy.
According to him, the government must exempt some so-called best Senior High Schools in the country from the policy.
“We have to look at it again. I think that there are certain schools which we should make autonomous and fee-paying and people will go there, but then make sure there are good community schools for everybody else. So the Achimota’s and the Wey Gey Hey’s, which people want their children to go, let them pay,” he noted.
The Former Chairman of the Ghana Revenue Authority also suggested that government could then use the funds spent on the best secondary schools to develop the community secondary schools.
“Only a small proportion of the poor come to Achimota, let the rich go there and pay. Use the Achimota funds to have very good schools in every district so that they can be there and don’t have to travel. They just come from the villages,” he said.
Prof. Adei believes quality education can be achieved when this is done.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo has indicated that despite the current fiscal challenges in the country, government will continue with the implementation of the flagship Free SHS policy.
Speaking at the induction of a new Registrar and Vice-Chancellor of the S.D. Dombo University in January, 2022, the President said government is aware of existing hurdles that have adversely impacted the economy, but will continue with its social intervention programmes, due to promising measures in place.
“In as much as our nation is confronted with difficulties, caused largely by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and its destructive impact on global supply chains and the operation of the global economy, the Ghanaian economy as indicated by the Minister for Finance, is rebounding strongly, after experiencing positive but slow growth in 2020. Data from the Statistical Service puts the average growth rate of the economy for the first three quarters of 2021 at 5.2%; putting us on course to exceed our provisional growth outturn of 4.4% for 2021," President Akufo-Addo explained.
Latest Stories
-
Four remanded over GH¢200K robbery attack in Wenchi
31 minutes -
Kojo Adu Asare expresses gratitude to Kwadwo Twum Boafo, Ato Forson, Julius Debrah, others for support during battle with kidney failure
38 minutes -
South Tongu MP supports Dorkploame D.A. Basic School with GH¢16,200 for rehabilitation
50 minutes -
Hamas confirms top commander killed in Israeli air strike
1 hour -
Photos: Inside the 2026 JoyNews Impact Makers Awards at Labadi Beach Hotel
1 hour -
Ghana’s Commonwealth Games participation in limbo over gov’t’s reluctance to release funds
1 hour -
Senior IS leader killed in joint operation, US and Nigeria say
1 hour -
Tens of thousands descend on London for rival protests
1 hour -
Trump warns Taiwan against declaring independence, hours after summit with China’s Xi
1 hour -
WHO intensifies response as Ebola outbreak kills dozens in DR Congo
1 hour -
Free speech is being protected under Mahama — SIF CEO rebuts Bawumia’s claims
2 hours -
Nine injured in Sefwi Awaso road crash
2 hours -
Was the IMF Programme derailed? – Facts show 2015 Programme was off-track, not 2023 Programme
2 hours -
Teach your children truth, not comfort – FDA Director shares life lessons on motherhood and survival
2 hours -
Ghana must take control of mining sector, but not through abrupt policy shifts – Kenneth Ashigbey
2 hours